The city in which Paul and Barnabas were considered gods was Lystra. This event is recorded in the New Testament book of Acts, specifically in Acts 14:8-18. Paul and Barnabas performed a miraculous healing in Lystra, which led the local people to believe they were gods in human form, with Barnabas being identified as Zeus and Paul as Hermes.
19And there came thither certain Jews from Antioch and Iconium, who persuaded the people, and having stoned Paul, drew him out of the city, supposing he had been dead. 20Howbeit, as the disciples stood round about him, he rose up, and came into the city: and the next day he departed with Barnabas to Derbe. In the passage above are all the available details. The Jews came from where Paul had previously been. They had intended to stone him there and he had escaped. What is interesting, even perhaps amazing, is how fickle the people of Lystra appeared to be. In the verses preceding this, they had regarded Paul as a god and wanted to sacrifice to him. We are not told the detail of what the Jews said. Whatever it was, it completely turned their opinion around. So, the simple answer is -we don't know.
John Mark was the person who was at the center of the conflict between Paul and Barnabas. Paul did not want to take him on a missionary journey while Barnabas did. This disagreement led to Paul and Barnabas parting ways.
Paul was stoned at Lystra. What years did he get stoned?
I think it was Stephen who was stonned and did not die
When Paul miraculously healed a man who was crippled from birth, the people of the town of Lystra took him to be Hermes (Mercury) and Barbabas to be Zeus (Jupiter). The encounter is recorded in Acts 14.
The city in which Paul and Barnabas were considered gods was Lystra. This event is recorded in the New Testament book of Acts, specifically in Acts 14:8-18. Paul and Barnabas performed a miraculous healing in Lystra, which led the local people to believe they were gods in human form, with Barnabas being identified as Zeus and Paul as Hermes.
The people of Lystra thought Paul was the god Mercurius (Hermes) after he healed the crippled man.
19And there came thither certain Jews from Antioch and Iconium, who persuaded the people, and having stoned Paul, drew him out of the city, supposing he had been dead. 20Howbeit, as the disciples stood round about him, he rose up, and came into the city: and the next day he departed with Barnabas to Derbe. In the passage above are all the available details. The Jews came from where Paul had previously been. They had intended to stone him there and he had escaped. What is interesting, even perhaps amazing, is how fickle the people of Lystra appeared to be. In the verses preceding this, they had regarded Paul as a god and wanted to sacrifice to him. We are not told the detail of what the Jews said. Whatever it was, it completely turned their opinion around. So, the simple answer is -we don't know.
Barnabas appears to have been the leader of the first missionary journey. There are several reasons for believing this. 1. Barnabas originally took on a mentoring role, seeking out Paul and bringing him to Antioch before. 2. Luke gives Barnabbas primacy in listing at the beginning of the mission trip (Acts 13) and only later moves to placing Paul first. 3. The mission trip started by going to Cyprus, which was the homeland of Barnabas. Only after that, did they go to Asia Minor, the homeland of Paul. 4. The people in the city of Lystra believed that Barnabas was the leader of the team. According to Acts 14: 11-12, "When the crowd saw what Paul had done, they yelled out in the language of Lycaonia, 'The gods have turned into humans and have come down to us!' The people then gave Barnabas the name Zeus, and they gave Paul the name Hermes, because he did the talking." So the people saw Barnabas as Zeus, the leader of the gods, and Paul as Hermes, the spokesman of the gods. While we (rightly) give great credit to Paul as a great missionary, it seems as if Barnabas may have been the one that developed the method of missions that was used by Paul and Barnabas on the first trip, Paul on the 2nd and 3rd trips, and (presumably) Barnabas and John Mark on their 2nd trip.
st paul was stoned at the city Lystra.
John Mark was the person who was at the center of the conflict between Paul and Barnabas. Paul did not want to take him on a missionary journey while Barnabas did. This disagreement led to Paul and Barnabas parting ways.
Paul was stoned at Lystra. What years did he get stoned?
Paul Paul visited Corinth, Antioch, Inconium, , Piisdia, Lystra, Thessalonica.
I think it was Stephen who was stonned and did not die
It depends upon the journeys. the short answer is that over all the journeys Paul was accompanied by Peter, Barnabas, Timothy, Silas, John Mark (author of the Gospel of Mark) and Luke amongst others.
John left Paul and Barnabas in Pamphylia during their missionary journey. He departed from them and returned to Jerusalem, which caused a disagreement between Paul and Barnabas later on. This event is documented in the New Testament, specifically in the Book of Acts.